Down the Nights and Down the Days: Eugene O'Neill's Catholic Sensibility (Irish in America) 0268008957, 9780268008956

This latest book from veteran O’Neillian Edward L. Shaughnessy examines the influence of the Irish playwright’s Catholic

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Table of contents :
Contents
Acknowledgments
Prologue
PART ONE: The Reluctant Apostate
Chapter 1: The Lad, the Rebel, the Artist
Chapter 2: Catholic Memory, Classic Forms
Chapter 3: Church Authority, Artistic Freedom, and the Search for God
PART TWO: Catholic Sensibility and Thematic Development
An Introductory Note
Chapter 4: Plays: Early Period (1916-1923)
Chapter 5: Plays: Middle Period (1924-1933)
Chapter 6: The "Catholic" Play: Days Without End
Chapter 7: Plays: Late Period (1939-1943)
Epilogue
Appendix
Notes
Index
Recommend Papers

Down the Nights and Down the Days: Eugene O'Neill's Catholic Sensibility (Irish in America)
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DOWN THE NIGHTS AND

DOWN THE DAYS

THE IRISH IN

AMERICA

Studies Sponsored by the Ancient Order of Hibernians and the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism

DOWN AND

THE

NIGHTS

DOWN

THE

DAYS

Eugene O'Neill's Catholic Sensibility

Edward L. Shaughnessy

University of Notre Dame Press Notre Dame, Indiana

University of Notre Dame Press Notre Dame, IN 46556 All Rights Reserved

Published in the United States of America Copyright © 2000 University of Notre Dame Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Shaughnessy, Edward L., 1932Down the nights and down the day s : Eugene O'Neill's Catholic sensibility I Edward L. Shaughnessy. p. cm. - (Irish in America) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-268-00895-7 (alk. paper)

ISBN ---- (web pdf) r.

O'Neill, Eugene, 1888-1953.

authors-History and criticism.

2. American drama-Catholic

3. Dramatists, American-20th

century -Biography. 4. Drama-Religious aspects-Christianity. 5. O'Neill, Eugene, 1888-1953-Religion. 6. Catholics-United States-Biography. 7. Catholic Church-Doctrines. Americans-Religion. I. Title. II. Series. PS3529.N5Z79696 1977 812'.52-dc20 [B]

8. Irish

96-27n7 CIP

The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI 239.48-1984.

Once again, of course, for Janet, and for Peg, Katie, Molly and Kevin­ Pax et felicitas.

Out of the depths I cry unto you, 0 Lord, 0 Lord, hear my voice.

Let thy ears be attentive To the voice of my supplication. -Psalm 129

I fied Him, down the nights and down the days; I fied Him, down the arches of the years; I fied Him, down the labyrinthine ways

Of my own mind; and in the mist of tears I hid from Him, and under running laughter.

-Francis Thompson

"Life's a tragedy-hurrah!" -O'Neill

Contents

Acknowledgments Prologue

Xt

I

Part One The Reluctant Apostate I.

The Lad, the Rebel, the Artist The O'Neills: Cradle Catholics Training and Education Greenwich Village, Radicals, and the Provincetown Theatre Dorothy Day

II II I8 23 27

2.

Catholic Memory, Classic Forms Catholic Sensibility: A Brief Definition O'Neill the Traditionalist O'Neill and the Timeless Issues of Sin and Guilt "What a modern tragedy would have to be "

34 34 39 43 50

3.

Church Authority, Artistic Freedom, and the Search for God A Note on the Climate of Opinion O'Neill and the Catholic Press "The Substitute-God Search": Brief Remarks on Three Plays The Great God Brown Lazarus Laughed Strange Interlude

53 53 56 66 67 70 73

Part Two Catholic Sensibility and Thematic Development

An Introductory Note +

Plays: Early Period (1916-1923) Ile Beyond the Horizon All God's Chillun Got Wings

79

x 5·

6. 7.

Contents Plays: Middle Period ( 1924- 19 3 3) Desire Under the Elms Mourning Becomes Electra Ah, Wilderness!

95 95 IOI II6

The "Catholic " Play: Days Without End ( 19 34)

I27

Plays: Late Period ( l 9 3 9- 194 3) The Iceman Cometh Long Day's Journey into Night A Touch of the Poet More Stately Mansions A Moon for the Misbegotten

I44 I44 I5 2 I62 I70 I79

Epilogue

I87

Appendix

The Immigrant Church Press and the Catholic Writer, 1920- 19 50

19 3

Notes

I99

Index

22I

Acknowledgments

I T IS DIFFICULT TO SAY how or when this project began. I remember a saintly Benedictine monk who once cautioned that reading Eugene O'Neill was ask­ ing for trouble. Perhaps he was right, although the same might be said about reading Shakespeare and Dostoevski. Over the years dozens of other good men and women have provided counsel and, happily, encouragement. I wish to thank some who have been especially generous . Without their support I could not have traveled very far along the road of this enterprise. I extend thanks to the following individuals: Scott Appleby and Barbara Lockwood of the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism, who have been exceptionally supportive; Professors Thomas E. Porter and Paul R . Valliere, for their useful suggestions after reading an early version or section of the manuscript; Lewis Miller and Nancy Everett, Director and the Collec­ tion Management Supervisor, respectively, of Irwin Library, Butler University; fellow O'Neillians Travis Bogard, Margaret Loftus Ranald and Frederick C . Wilkins, for advice and encouragement; Fr. Thomas J . Daly o f the Boston Chancery Office, for recollections of diocesan attempts to be put in touch with Eugene O'Neill when the playwright was dying; Sr. Regina Shaughnessy, S.P., for keeping me in mind; and for others who should be named, in justice and affection-Irving Fine, George Hoffmann, James McCaslin, and Francis Quinn. To archives and archivists (every researcher's best friends) I extend grati­ tude: the Special Collections Division, Lauinger Library, Georgetown Univer­ sity, for permission to quote from letters of Daniel Lord, S.J., to Martin Quigley and from Eugene O'Neill to Martin Quigley; the Memorial Library Archives, Marquette University, for use of materials in the Dorothy Day and Catholic Worker collections; to the Hesburgh Memorial Library, University of Notre Dame, for photographs and a letter, Eugene O'Neill to Laurence Lava­ noux; the Cushwa-Leighton Library, St . Mary's College, for a letter from Louis Sheaffer to Sr. M. Madeleva, C.S. C.; to the Dinand Library, the College of the Holy Cross, for letters exchanged between Michael Earls, S.J., and Richard Dana Skinner. For permissions to quote passages from The Plays of Eugene O' Neill, volxi

xii

Acknowledgments

umes l, 2, and 3 ( 19 8 3) and from A Moon for the Misbegotten ( 19 52), I should like to thank Random House; from Long Day's Journey into Night ( 19 56), A Touch of the Poet ( 19 57), and More Stately Mansions: The Unexpur­ gated Edition, Martha Gilman Bower, ed. ( 19 8 8), I acknowledge with thanks to Yale University and the Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Library. I am grateful for permission to reprint excerpts from Eugene O' Neill in Ireland: The Critical Reception ( 19 8 8), an imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., Westport, Conn. The Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the Univer­ sity of Notre Dame supported this project in the form of a stipend that accom­ panied the 1994 Hibernian Research Award . My deepest gratitude to Janet and our children for their constancy and cheerful support .

Prologue

IN THE THREE quarters of a century leading up to Vatican Council II, the world of American Catholicism was massively established . It is not surprising, then, that we are staggered by its later undoing. For that world is no more. When John XXIII threw open the windows of the Vatican, not zephyrs but a hurri­ cane swept through the church . Indeed, the consequences of that heroic ges­ ture defy easy summary: not only has the institution itself been radically trans­ formed, but the very character of our times has been altered by the Council. In 1900 the American Catholic church was a phenomenon quite different from that same communion as it exists today. To many of its faithful it was the very center and focus of life. If we fail to recognize that essential fact, we cannot begin to estimate its influence on the life of yesterday's everyman, including that of the apostate genius, Eugene O'Neill. Many Catholics of that earlier period saw their church as this world's chief repository of truth. In that community one felt secure in the accepted defini­ tions of reality (of good and bad, that is). For a Catholic coming of age in the first half of the twentieth century, certain words carried a theological plausi­ bility that today seems positively quaint. Sin and redemption were such words. For some outsiders, Roman Catholicism itself must have seemed an anachro­ nism. Here was an institution that commanded loyalty and obedience, even as it had in the Middle Ages. But to its members, the church's promise to endure until the end of time was taken as a very article of faith. For Holy Mother had transformed the tragedy of suffering into the salvific mystery of the via dolo­ rosa. Who could deny her stunning appeal? In defining its role, this church invoked both the law of love and the symbols of authority. Her mission was to console the dispirited, a work of mercy named in the Sermon on the Mount. But the church could play equally well the role of stern patriarch, whose icy glare of disapproval could paralyze the soul of dissenter or rebel. One might love the church or leave it (or both) . Its claims, however, would remain deeply etched in the Catholic psyche. Such was the power that formed the moral vi­ sion of the faithful. It played no small part in forming the worldview of James and Ella O'Neill and that of their sons, James, Jr., and Eugene Gladstone. Eugene left the church as an adolescent. Asked in 1946 if he had returned I

2

Prologue

to Catholicism, he responded, "Unfortunately, no . " None, then, should at­ tempt to make of him something that he was not. The aim here is to see the something that he was. In addition to his (anyone's) impenetrable mystery, O'Neill was sometimes a fearful, intimidating presence. In his searing honesty he often startled his interlocutors. Thus, he no doubt raised eyebrows when he remarked at a final rehearsal for The Iceman Cometh, "In all my plays sin is punished and redemption takes place. "1 Most students of O'Neill will agree that this is an astonishing declaration. W hat did it mean? When he used such language, O'Neill understood full well its power and nuances. But there is absolutely no reason to think he accepted the doctrinal authority the words conveyed to believing Christians . That given, an even greater mystery attaches to his utterance. For, whatever he meant, we may be certain that he was neither joking nor playing the card of obscurantism. Not O'Neill. Those who turn in sorrow or anger from early faith no doubt suffer deep spiritual trauma. We are not surprised, therefore, when they seek to flee all reminders of the soul-scalding experience. Eugene O'Neill knew such an expe­ rience, yet his life offers something quite remarkable among biographies of modern artists: he did not, thereupon, give up his search for God. Rather, he seems to have been haunted by the very idea of God. Seen in this context, then, his well-known obsession with Francis Thompson's poem about the "hound of heaven " suggests a certain logic. Indeed, the very image of the hound con­ nected with O'Neill's sense of life as a mystery. His teenage rejection of Catholicism, born first of disappointment and then of fury, only intensified his search for the "answer. " He was determined to locate it. O'Neill gave his attention and short-term fealty first to this, then to that, philosophy-eastern and western, ancient and modern. It is interesting to note, therefore, that his most prolonged allegiance derived from inspirations old and new: Greek dramatic ritual, given latter-day relevance in the works of Friedrich Nietzsche. In this philosopher he found a celebration of classic forms that made the theater a kind of temple and tragedy a religion. Thus it seems fitting to speak of O'Neill, even after he severed ties to Catholicism, as a reli­ gious man. He had said that The Iceman Cometh was "a denial of any other experi­ ence of faith in my plays. "2 Yet we are transfixed by some inner logic that moves through the O'Neill canon. How was it possible for him to speak of sin and redemption in his plays, after the explicit denial of faith? It would be difficult to imagine language more conspicuously or traditionally Christian. Sin and redemption: the very words recall the central mystery of Chris­ tianity. But if O'Neill's words cannot be construed to have a theological expla­ nation, what can they mean? Was his remark nothing more than a sentimental characterization of his life's work? Was he indulging a penchant for irony? We

Prologue

3

cannot be certain, of course, but we know that O'Neill was little given to the sort of irony practiced by absurdists and self-satirists. No, his words tend more to betray habits (a sensibility) formed by training and culture. By the time he wrote his final plays he had, it seems clear, settled the question of his identity. And, while it would seem perverse to speak of him then as a doctrinal or prac­ ticing Catholic, it seems perfectly reasonable to speak of him as a man formed in the crucible of Irish Catholicism. So it was that Eugene O'Neill could re­ mark without self-consciousness about sin and redemption. This grounding had taken place in the final decade of the nineteenth and earliest years of the twentieth centuries. It undoubtedly affected his personality formation. There­ after, his psychological-spiritual profile becomes more and more difficult to in­ terpret. Perhaps no one's becoming can be fully fathomed . The clues appear to be in part traceable but in larger part enigmatic. Two basic issues are at the core of this study. I wish to define "Catholic sensibility, " for I believe O'Neill carried this value over from childhood into adulthood and that its presence contributed much to his moral vision. Second, I attempt to follow O'Neill's sin-and-redemption theme where it leads . I think it does not lead to the sweeping inclusiveness of "all my plays . " My focus is therefore as much biographical as it is critical. I see evidence of a cultural mem­ ory that gives his plays the authority of lived experience. Part l of this study addresses several interrelated issues, biographical-his­ torical and literary. That is, it takes up connections between O'Neill's personal life and art and certain developments in Catholic intellectual history. It thereby provides a background against which to read the meaning of his Catholic sen­ sibility. It traces the years of his initiation and training in the milieu and his intellectual-spiritual rebellion in adolescence and young manhood. Chapter 2 offers an examination of the powerful forces in the Catholic ethos that estab­ lished themselves deeply in his psyche, the teachings on sin and guilt, for ex­ ample, which he later disclaimed but whose imprint remained in certain ways indelible in his memory. These presences, I believe, were carried over into his understanding of tragedy itself. In chapter 3 I attempt to describe the climate of opinion that characterized American Catholic intellectual life from the mid-nineteenth century until the years just prior to Vatican Council II (1962-1965). There can be no doubt, of course, that the reception of O'Neill's plays in the Catholic community was affected adversely in this climate . Pius X's condemnation of modernism in 1907, with its chilling effect on the development of Catholic literature, has considerable relevance to the problems of many artists with the church. Indeed, the heavy-handedness of the Pope's gesture damaged prospects for Catholic in­ tellectual life well into the next half century and, consequently, impaired the reception of O'Neill's plays in the Catholic world. Yet a too protracted examination of such issues in modern church history

4

Prologue

can distract our attention from an immediate concern with O'Neill's Catholic sensibility. Therefore, I have chosen to offer limited discussion of this back­ ground in the endnotes and an appendix ( "The Immigrant Church Press and the Catholic Writer, 1920- 19 50 ") . The appendix carries ( 1) a brief review of the Pope's censure of modernism that so discouraged the development of a lively Catholic intellectualism; and (2) an account of the hostility often di­ rected by the American Catholic press toward Catholic writers in this country. These materials will explain a great deal, I believe, about the playwright's at­ titude toward the institutional church . But O'Neill's work is in part the history of an artist's "search for God . " (He himself used this phrase more than once, a s we shall see.) Indeed, his at­ tempts to find a substitute for his lost faith were exceptionally intense, espe­ cially in the 1920s. Of course, this history demands attention here; therefore, in the final subsection of chapter 3 I treat, in rapid review, three "search-for­ God " plays from the twenties: The Great God Brown, Lazarus Laughed, and Strange Interlude. Fascinating and brilliant as they are in their contributions to the modern theater, however, these plays do not place before us protagonists who are involved in deep human relationships, as do the plays examined in part 2. Another way of putting this is to say that the major characters do not "sin, " since sin is an act committed in human interconnectedness. In these plays "big subjects " overshadow character and character development. The very concept of sin implies relationship. One person wounds an­ other-out of spite or anger or envy. The tissues of love or friendship are scarred; the integrity of connection is violated . The plays chosen for discussion in part 2 are chiefly those that treat the dynamics of human relationships, es­ pecially familial and marital ties . Here the sin-and-redemption thesis is put to the test in eleven plays. Included among these is The Iceman Cometh, a work some will insist cannot fairly be called a family play. I hold to precisely the opposite view: familial and marital dynamics operate very powerfully in it. In certain O'Neill plays, however, no such connections exist, or they are merely implied . As a general rule expressionistic plays do not examine inter­ personal exchanges . Thus, The Emperor Jones and The Hairy Ape are not taken up in this study. One thinks also of the S. S. Glencairn plays, powerful mood pieces but not plays of complex human relationships. Not all one-act plays need be disqualified, however: Ile stands the test. I examine plays from O'Neill's three major periods. From the early years ( 19 16- 1923), I have chosen Ile, Beyond the Horizon, and All God's Chillun Got Wings. In the middle period ( 1924- 19 3 3) Desire Under the Elms, Mourn­ ing Becomes Electra, and Ah, Wilderness! offer the excellent examples of the theme under consideration. But I choose the greatest number of titles from the late period ( 19 39- 194 3): The Iceman Cometh, Long Day's Journey into Night, A Touch of the Poet, More Stately Mansions, and A Moon for the Misbegotten.

Prologue

5

These were the years of O'Neill's most universally acclaimed achievements . The reader will not be surprised, therefore, that the most striking illustrations of my theme are to be found in the plays of this period . Days Without End (1934), the "Catholic play, " is taken up separately in chapter 6. Some may question the inclusion of Ah, Wilderness!, O'Neill's only comedy. I examine this question at length further along, of course . For the moment, perhaps it is enough to say that the play offers a model of marriage and the family. This means that it deals, as does Long Day's Journey, with is­ sues of relationship. Its value, then, lies in the idea of example by contrast. In sections that take up ideas of tragedy, I frequently cite commentators who were O'Neill's near contemporaries: Joseph Wood Krutch, George Jean Nathan, Richard Dana Skinner, Lionel Trilling, et al. I intend by this no slight to scholars of my own generation, born between the world wars, and those younger still. As a matter of fact, many of the older critics held strong reserva­ tions about O'Neill's intellectual depth: Eric Bentley, Bernard De Voto, Francis Fergusson, Trilling. Nevertheless, they were usually alive to assumptions dealt with in his plays, whether or not they agreed with them. Some may feel that Krutch's views are too often invoked. I know very well that, even as The Mod­ ern Temper (1929) made a brilliant contribution to intellectual history, its influence has long since paled. As Edwin H. Cady noted over two decades ago,3 Krutch himself seemed later to downplay the pessimism of his study. I call at­ tention to Krutch's views for three reasons, however. First, in the years before World War II, when many distinguished critics (De Voto and Fergusson among them) addressed O'Neill's "weaknesses " in ad hominem terms, Krutch tried to render a scrupulously fair judgment. Second, although he was himself com­ pelled to accept the assumptions of the modernist movement in the arts, the venerable critic recognized spiritual dimensions in the equally pessimistic work of O'Neill. Third, in my judgment, Krutch's ideas on tragedy carry into the present with considerable authority. Richard B . Sewall has written on O'Neill and tragedy with refreshing modesty and clarity. In "Eugene O'Neill and the Sense of the Tragic, " Profes­ sor Sewall recalls that in his "career-long fumbling with the idea of Tragedy, I have come to at least one conclusion. If the set of your mind is not tragic, you'd better not try to write a tragedy. "4 O'Neill, he said, had the tragedian's mind­ set. When the truth is told, most of us "fumble " on this field. This is so be­ cause, if it implies anything, tragedy implies mystery. In discussing it, there­ fore, we cannot know (entirely) what we are talking about. But we should try to clarify our intentions . Take Sewall's elementary distinction between tragedy and tragic: " . . . [T}ragedy as a term in criticism is in danger of becoming ex­ clusive and academic. I have found the adjective more useful. "5 The latter term suggested to him the "great tragic temperaments " that connected O'Neill with

6

Prologue

such figures as Shakespeare and Hawthorne, Melville and Conrad, Dostoevski and Strindberg. "Great tragic temperaments " may strike us as a bit sonorous, but the words create a context and give us a sense of the direction the critic will take. So long as the characterization is valid, we will feel comfortable in the discussion. One matter may require a special word. Should even limited reference be made to the post-Vatican II Catholic sensibility that has evolved? After all, O'Neill died in 19 53, nine years before the convening of the Council in Rome. Therefore, this later evolution in Catholic teaching and "style " may appear to be irrelevant to any discussion of his life work. At first this position seems en­ tirely plausible. Yet, in the end, I reject its absolute imposition for this reason. The Council was born of dynamic forces that had been abuilding for decades, both inside and outside the monolith of Roman Catholicism. The conclave marked, of course, the church's coming to terms with long-standing issues of authority and freedom. Indeed, the phenomenon took on the patterns of ear­ lier upheavals in intellectual and cultural history. Standing at the remove of four or five centuries, we today can see the pat­ terns that were then forming but that were too blurred to be discerned by that earlier "man in the street. " Perhaps the chaos of our moment will be better understood by others who may look back upon it as we now look back upon those centuries of Renaissance and Reformation. The tensions born in such "episodes " inevitably challenge the reigning authority and unsettle the fixed opinions of the majority. In time, however, resolution occurs and the changes (in definition and doctrine and in the organization's understanding of its role) become themselves a part of the tradition. Thus, the very issues that once burned white hot lose their vitality and immediacy. Occasional but necessary reference to post-Vatican Council II conditions, then, can give us a clearer view, by contrast, of earlier times and tensions. That point is especially relevant here, for, by reminding ourselves of those cultural values O'Neill accepted and those he rejected, we gain some understanding of Catholic influence on his life and work.

Endlessly, obsessively, O'Neill dealt with the same three themes, all inter­ connected. First was the question of belonging: Where do I fit in? In this he spoke for many of his fellow artists and friends and for many other men and women of our time. A second and equally haunting theme was that one he announced to Krutch (and which has been, perhaps, cited with irritating fre­ quency): "I am interested only in the relation between man and God. "6 The third was his obsession with the past, for the past held the mystery of his fate. He could never break its code.

Prologue

7

To many commentators his work, especially after the mid-r92os, had be­ come self-absorbed and irrelevant to the great issues of the day. Indeed, his entire canon offers titles that appear to have little connection with the worka­ day struggles of the proletariat: Beyond the Horizon, Lazarus Laughed, Strange

Interlude, Mourning Becomes Electra, Ah, Wilderness!, Days Without End, The Iceman Cometh, Long Day's Journey into Night. And even in those works that deal with questions of prejudice, social justice, or workers' rights (e.g., Anna Christie, The Hairy Ape, All God's Chillun Got Wings), the greater issues are existential-philosophical. "O'Neill is least interesting when he occasionally concerns himself with social realism. His tradition is that of Lear and Faust. " 7 Even if he called himself "a philosophical anarchist, " he may have been, like his own Larry Slade in The Iceman Cometh, unable to conquer his own am­ bivalence: "When man's soul isn't a sow's ear, it will be time enough to dream of silk purses " (III, 590 [see note 3 8, pp. 207- 8]) . Was O'Neill, then, merely playing a t the revolution with such true believ­ ers as Jack Reed and Louise Bryant, Max Eastman and Hippolyte Havel? Did he choose to ignore the causes that bound them all in a common mission? Perhaps the one best qualified to offer an opinion was Dorothy Day, apostle to the poor, a revolutionary who remained faithful to social causes to the end. Some years after his death, she seemed to suggest that he had a different battle to fight, one that consumed his artist's soul: ...she disagreed with Agnes Boulton and with O'Neill's last wife, Carlotta Monterey, that O'Neill had no interest in religion or the idea of God.To this proposition, Dorothy said, she could "only disagree." She thought of her discussions with O'Neill on Baudelaire and Strindberg, and what O'Neill had said about their art. O'Neill had not dismissed the God idea as so much trivia. "Gene's relations with his God was a warfare [sic] in itself. He fought with God to the end of his days. He rebelled against man's fate."8

He was not, like Clifford Odets and Arthur Miller a little later, formed in the wake of Sacco-Vanzetti and the paralysis of the American r9 3 os . Political conscience is not the spine of O'Neill's work, Depression era or any other pe­ riod. He had given that up long before Odets had come on the scene: "Time was when I was an active socialist, and, after that, a philosophical anarchist. But today [ 1922] I can't feel that anything like that really matters. "9 Spiritually he was a classicist. The absurdist has an eye on the present, for what else is there? That is his tragedy. The writer with a political agenda, often a profound ethicist (Shaw and O' Casey; Miller, Hellman, Hansberry), places greatest value on the future: "Awake and sing! " But to be transfixed as O'Neill was is to be bound to the past. I do not think you can write anything of value or understanding about the present. You can only write about life if it is far enough in the past. The

8

Prologue present is too much mixed up with superficial values; you can't know which thing is important and which is not. The past which I have chosen is one I 10 knew . . .

.

That was to be both the torment and the glory of his tragic vision. O'Neill's past proved to be a heavy burden: a history of loss. He lost faith and family and fellowship. Prudence argues against confronting matters of such gravity. The challenge is daunting, especially if one lacks, as I do, the theologian's training that seems to be called for. Yet I take heart: "Tillich said that anyone who had a degree of ultimate concern was a theologian."11 I add to this a belief that those who hold something of the cultural memory are re­ sponsible for preserving it. To that end I undertake this formidable task.

PART ONE

The Reluctant Apostate

... I must confess to you that for the past twenty years

almost, (although I was brought up a Catholic, naturally, and educated until thirteen in Catholic schools), I have had no Faith. -Eugene O'Neill to

Sr.

Mary Leo Tierney, O.P.

1 The Lad, the Rebel, the Artist

The O'Neills: Cradle Catholics

EARLY AND OFTEN Eugene O'Neill had been reminded of his Irish heritage. That, it is probably fair to say, was not much different from being reminded of his Catholic heritage.1 If one's ethnic and religious origins often shape one's identity, this principle surely held true in the case of O'Neill. The Celtic back­ ground appealed to him. Indeed, he took considerable pride in the history of the O'Neills, especially that of the second Earl of Tyrone, Hugh O'Neill.2 But the Catholic influence of his formative years produced lifelong anguish. He could neither forget his past nor live comfortably in the knowledge of it. Down the years he fled his fate. When he sketched the scenario for a "miracle play, " Days Without End, the playwright described the hero's dilemma in words that undoubtedly carried autobiographical overtones: "[O]nce a Catholic always a Catholic. " To O'Neill, moreover, whatever touched upon identity became in­ eluctably charged with mystery. A complex fate, Henry James might have called it. The near reflex response to religious authority that once obtained among the Catholic laity has been forgotten by many and never experienced by other contemporary Catholics. Earlier devotional habits of daily living are now so long forgotten that their renewed practice would seem the starkest eccentricity in this late day of the twentieth century. The overused word ambience may be the only fair characterization of the pre-Vatican II state of Catholic conscious­ ness. An entire vocabulary has been lost to a generation. Not only has liturgi­ cal Latin been preempted by the vernacular, but a very catalog of phrases, for­ mulae, and objects is no longer stored in the memory bank. Nearly a century ago James Joyce recorded some of these terms in his first novel: genuflection,

thurible, chasuble, tunicle, paten, dalmatic, monstrance. Unfamiliarity with these words cannot be measured merely by our chrono­ logical distance from them, however. Separation is psychological and intellec­ tual as well as temporal. The contemporary Catholic's understanding of him­ self is something very different from that of his counterpart a century ago. The

II

I2

The Reluctant Apostate

institution's earlier customs might well seem, to today's believer, something very close to superstition. Some appreciation of the older forms can be gained from novels like those of Patrick A. Sheehan (1852-1913), Irish author and priest, or from the American, J. F. Powers (1917). And yet, Canon Shee­ han's stories are altogether out of vogue today, and Powers's work is less and less read. Here is the nub of the thing: without direct contact, one lacks expe­ riential insight. To have lived in an institution's presence, even if one is con­ temptuous of its power, is to sense something of its culture . One will then know its diurnal hum and rhythms by acquaintance (connaitre). What is fading is a memory of the ethos that animated American Catholi­ cism as it was practiced, let us say, from 1870-1960. The institution, on the eve of the twentieth century (it is hard to overemphasize the point) had been formed by a hierarchy whose roots were Irish. And for another three score years, the American Catholic Church would retain this decidedly Irish charac­ ter. This meant that its administrative style was authoritarian. In the life of both its professed (priests, nuns, and brothers) and its lay Catholics, we will discover a faith in the institution as the living embodiment of mystery. Laws of fasting and abstinence were built into the calendar, constant re­ minders of the need to do penance: the forty days of Lent, introduced by the stern lesson of Ash Wednesday; meatless Fridays; the Easter duty (a require­ ment to confess one's sins and to receive the Eucharist between Easter Sunday and the feast of the Ascension). Arranged by the calendar, the gospel stories were retold every year. No human activity could stand unregulated. The rules of relationship were enforced with paternal authority; all moral deviance was considered sinful and was punished . The laws were clear and unequivocal: no divorce, no sex outside matrimony. The most egregious offenses were called mortal sins (death to the life of grace in the soul; death until the sinner con­ fessed, received absolution, and did penance) . Even to place oneself in prox­ imity to temptation was called an "occasion of sin." It should not be hard to see how these negative assessments of one's own nature (puritanical, Jansenis­ tic, even Manichaean) might induce overscrupulosity among the timid . Some called it all a mindless program of rote recital. Its practitioners, how­ ever, internalized its symbolism and therewith learned to read "reality." If a person's training were solid enough to carry her through adolescence and young adulthood, she might even find it possible to speak without shuddering about her own imminent demise. Indeed, at their first communions, a moment of ineffable joy, children whispered the "prayer for a happy death ." The senti­ ment would be reinforced thousands of times over a lifetime in the Ave Maria: "Pray for us, now and at the hour of our death." Thus, there was no incon­ gruity on Ash Wednesday, when one heard the reminder, Memento mori (Re­ member death). At home and on the playground children used this vocabulary.

The Lad, the Rebel, the Artist

r3

Indeed, they spoke of things doctrinal and liturgical with such confidence that one might have thought of them as elfin theologians or infant mystics. There is not an uncertain moment in the young Catholic's acceptance of established creed. Before he has completed his years of adolescence, every fundamental truth of his Church has become a part of him; the articles of the Apostles' Creed are the steel uprights in the process of his religious thought. The truths his whole life is founded upon are dogma, and he spurns the liberality of open Bible and free interpretation. There is not an elastic idea in the structure of his belief. Hence it is that the Catholic's attitude toward life in all its phases is fun­ damentally theological. And the more his mind grows in capability to grasp ideas for the superstructure of his dogma, the more does it become theologi­ cal in attitude. 3

Strange beyond all was that this parochialism existed in America, where the stolid Protestant was both worthy citizen and wary neighbor. In the streets of New York, Chicago, Detroit, and scores of other cities one saw nuns in a hundred different habits, priests wearing Roman collar at the ball game, altar boys in cassock and surplice and marching in public procession. It is a picture worth imagining. We are not speaking here of life in the capitals of medieval Europe; we are recalling a phase of life amid the buzz of twentieth-century American cities. The strangeness of it all seemed even greater, moreover, be­ cause this openness appeared not to be self-conscious . Thus oriented, one might remain confident, even joyful, on life's pilgrimage. There was the other side of things, to be sure: the sense of sin, a crippling legacy for many. That is another chapter, however, to be taken up at length further along. The point to be stressed here is that a child coming into awareness in this elemental Catho­ lic world would bear until death its indelible character, its mark on the soul: a complex fate indeed. It was into this view of the natural and supernatural that James, Sr., and Ella entrusted the winsome and hopeful Jamie and, a decade later, the impres­ sionable Eugene . The latter, after boyhood, came to realize that he shared with his parents and brother a fate impossible to avoid: Life was a tragedy. James and Ella O'Neill were "cradle Catholics, " persons baptized, as their sons would be, in infancy. They would immerse these "lads, " James, Jr., and Eugene Gladstone, into the ethos they knew and revered . Here was the classical operation of tradition, literally the handing on of a way of life and a set of beliefs, a sense of the world's and the self's reality as formed by religion. To fail in this rite would constitute a serious dereliction. A parent's life was blighted whose child should abandon his faith . Thus, in O'Neill's family drama, James Tyrone chides his sons for their betrayal: "You' ve both flouted the faith you were born and brought up in-the one true faith of the Catholic Church-

I4

The Reluctant Apostate

and your denial has brought nothing but self-destruction. "4 The parents were legion who, like James and Ella O'Neill, committed their children to an intellectual and spiritual regimen that they themselves had experienced and honored. If parents could afford, as the O'Neills could, to place their offspring in the best Catholic grammar and prep schools, they could insulate the children from threats to their cultural identity that would surely be encountered in daily exchanges in the urban public schools . When reinforced by ritual practice in church and school, the stern lessons of the catechism became things so fixed in memory that their echoes might be recalled, even after faith itself had been discarded. "What will it profit a man if he gain the entire world yet suffer the loss of his own soul? " Even more sombre: "Remember, man, that thou art dust and unto dust thou shalt return. "5 It is important to realize that O'Neill's prepubescent years coincided ex­ actly with the final dozen years of the nineteenth century. The times themselves offered far fewer challenges to parental authority than are fronted in today's cacophony of distractions. Moreover, in their earliest years children seem little inclined to challenge authority figures in value-conflicts. Indeed, the child will probably wish to please her adult protectors and models. At no time in later life will all matters seem so clear. When one has experienced this protected childhood, she remembers forever the language and impressions of these early years, when other ideals had not yet surfaced to conflict with what one knew to be true. Whether such a regimen is at bottom efficacious is a question beyond con­ sideration here . We do know, however, that religious memory can produce powerful effects on adult perception. Memory can offer a retreat from the trauma of the moment. We know this in part because the playwright has, with unusual authority, recorded many such instances. So it is that Mary Tyrone mourns her fall from innocence: "I was brought up in a respectable home and educated in the best convent in the Middle West. Before I met Mr. Tyrone I hardly knew there was such a thing as a theater. I was a very pious girl. I even dreamed of becoming a nun " (LDJ, 102 ) . Her husband also recognizes his fail­ ures in virtue. "It's true, " he says, when his sons challenge his fidelity, "I'm a bad Catholic in the observance, God forgive me. But I believe " (77). The Church had called this world a vale of tears. One should not expect to be happy. The world was not a playground, children were told. The liturgi­ cal calendar itself, in its annual cycle of feasts and seasons, was intended to remind the faithful of that sombre injunction: Take up your cross. Life is a kind of war in which one mystery (evil) contends with another and greater mystery (love) . When the Church bade adieu to one of its sojourners, it had completed its mission in relation to that soul and now entrusted the departed one to other spirits: In paradisum deducant te A ngeli (May the angels lead

The Lad, the Rebel, the Artist

I5

you into paradise) . The faithful were taught to believe in the superiority of the "other, " as it sanctified the here-and-now. James O'Neill had climbed from galling poverty onto the plateau of fame and wealth. Ella, on the other hand, had known the security of a pampered childhood . The fragile Miss Quinlan, christened Mary Ellen, had not been brought up to take a place in the somewhat racy world of the professional theater. Ella (the name she came to prefer) had been prepared to participate in a life of high culture. Thus she had been trained in music and languages, first by the Ursuline Nuns of Cleveland, and then by the Sisters of the Holy Cross at St. Mary's Academy, South Bend, Indiana. Ella proved to be docile, talented, and modest. She was happy in an environment far removed from the hurly­ burly of an expanding America in the decades following the Civil War. Later Ella O'Neill would recall her years in those semicloistered precincts as a time of peace and happiness. In the 1870s, however, her life was transformed . By the time she returned to Cleveland, her father had been dead one year. James, who also grew up in Ohio, had been protected from nothing. With his brothers and sisters he had, like thousands of others, come from an Ireland of famine only to join in a hardscrabble campaign to survive. His family would live a catch-as-catch-can existence. After a few bitter years in Buffalo, where his father had apparently abandoned them, James moved with his mother and siblings to Cincinnati. The young James O'Neill was nothing if not resourceful and eager to make his way. At age twenty or so, passing an idle evening at the billiards table, he was invited to come next door onto the boards of Cincinnati's Na­ tional Theatre. Extras were needed to fill small parts in Dion Boucicault's im­ mensely successful melodrama, The Colleen Bawn. The year was 1867 . By 1874 James was playing with Edwin Booth, in one production alternating with the tragedian in the parts of Iago and Othello. He had already behind him an impressive list of important roles with other major stars: Joseph Jefferson, Barry Sullivan, and Edwin Forrest. He had played Romeo to Adelaide Neilson's Juliet and Macbeth to Charlotte Cushman's Lady Macbeth. He had been lead­ ing man in John Ellsler's Cleveland stock company and achieved a similar prominence at McVicker's and Hooley's in Chicago . By the end of the seventies he had played the nation's greatest theaters in the full range of parts from Boucicault to Shakespeare. Along the way James had hit it off with Thomas J. Quinlan of County Tipperary, who had settled in Cleveland with his wife, Bridget (Lundigan) and their two children, Mary Ellen and William. With a partner, Quinlan had built a successful business, retailing tobaccos, candies, liquors and newspapers. His store was located near Ellsler's Academy of Music, where James often per­ formed. Before long the young actor had become a frequent guest in the Quin­ lan home, where he came to know the retailer's shy daughter, eleven years his

I6

The Reluctant Apostate

junior. He probably saw her infrequently in the years she attended St. Mary's ( 1872- 187 5). But the young lady had, withall, a certain measure of assertiveness. After completing her course at St. Mary's, Ella convinced her widowed mother to move to New York, where she became reacquainted with James O'Neill. Bridget Quinlan, who had no high opinion of actors, hoped to discourage her daughter's ardent response to the handsome actor, but to no avail. The couple were married at St. Anne's Church in Manhattan on June 14, 1877, the new Mrs. O'Neill not quite twenty years old . The bride and groom shared a love that was anchored in their devotion to the faith of their Irish forebears, a faith that would carry them through a long life and to the consecrated ground of St. Mary's Cemetery, New London, Con­ necticut. In the beginning, however, the joy of this beautiful match was dimin­ ished somewhat by a paternity suit that was brought against James. The charge was made by a Miss Nettie Walsh of Cleveland, with whom the actor had lived for a brief time. The case was eventually dismissed . In the long years of their marriage, Ella had no reason to doubt James's fidelity, but the premarital insult to her sensibilities could never be entirely forgotten. At any rate, the couple soon left for San Francisco, where James had been signed on and where, on September ro, 1878, James O'Neill, Jr., was born. Over the next decade the first scars of married life were etched into the tissues of their relationship . James drank, probably too much, even if he kept a tight rein on his habit and never missed a cue or a line. Nevertheless, his habitual post-performance unwinding had not been anticipated by the sensitive convent academy graduate. She soon came to tire of travel by trains, inelegant lodgings, and in general the men and women who made up the acting com­ pany. In 188 3 James made a decision that would bring on his greatest profes­ sional tragedy. He agreed to replace Charles Thorne, Jr., in the part of Edmond Dantes in Charles Fechter's adaptation of the Dumas romance, The Count of Monte Cristo. Eventually O'Neill bought the rights from John Stetson, man­ ager of Booth's Theatre in New York. He made from it a fortune but became its slave . For a quarter century James O'Neill was chained to this lumbering vehicle that eventually carried him down a road to theatrical oblivion. He played Dantes everywhere, finally ending the fiasco in 19 12, when he made a film version of it. James O'Neill had by then come to rue the day he'd ever heard of The Count of Monte Cristo. He knew what he had done: "I'd lost the great talent I once had through years of easy repetition, " laments James Tyrone in Eugene O'Neill's family tragedy. 6 A paralyzing fear of poverty had built in him a desire for financial security, a security that he gained, but at the cost of his genuine promise as artist of the stage. In l 88 5 the O'Neills lost their second son, Edmund Burke, aged two . In

The Lad, the Rebel, the Artist

I7

this case it was Ella who would forever carry the heavy burden of guilt. In order to be with James on tour, she had left the baby in the care of her mother, who was also caring for Jamie. T he older brother, who had measles, had been told not to enter Edmund's room. But Jamie did, and the smaller boy died as a result of the infection he contracted. Ella always suspected her first son of deliberately infecting his brother, but she blamed herself more for neglecting her motherly responsibilities. Later that year Ella would accompany Jamie to South Bend, Indiana, where he would be left as a boarding student in the Notre Dame Minim division. T here he was placed in the charge of the same Holy Cross sisters who had guided Ella at St. Mary's across the road. Two years later Bridget Lundigan Quinlan died and was buried in St. Mary's Ceme­ tery in New London, where the O'Neills had established their summer head­ quarters only a few years earlier. ( James and Ella, taking the Grand Tour in Europe, were unable to be present for the funeral.) One further major event occurred in the decade of the l88os, a moment that produced very mixed blessings indeed. Eugene Gladstone O'Neill was born on October 16, 1888.7 Ella had hoped the baby would be a girl. Eugene O'Neill would be endlessly reminded of his parents' high reputa­ tion as practicing Catholics. T hroughout the first decade of their marriage James and Ella had reinforced one another's faith. Even in the morally shabby theater world, James had come to be known for benevolence toward his fellow actors, for an uncommon civility, and for an admirable fidelity in the practice of his faith. Brandon Tynan, his young colleague in Joseph and His Brethren, said of him: "I was proud to be in that show, and enjoyed getting to know 'the Governor.' We used to go to Mass together every Sunday, even on the road. "8 Among his friends James counted many priests. (He himself had once been mistaken for a priest.) His reputation as a model Catholic was well established: "James attended Mass every Sunday at St. Joseph's Church [in New London], contrary to Eugene O'Neill's description of James Tyrone, who is pictured as being negligent about his formal observance of religion. Ella's relatives, in fact, were constantly after James to bring Ella with him to church. T hey had long since given up on Eugene. "9 George M. Cohan later recalled that his own fa­ ther and James O'Neill had been very instrumental in founding the Catholic Actors Guild. Ellen Quinlan would always be known for her piety. She is, of course, the model for Mary Tyrone. The nuns praised her schoolwork and her piety. Ellen wore a large cross on a heavy gold chain around her neck, and she took a grave delight in pray­ ing in the Holy House of Loreto, a replica of the Santa Casa in Italy, exoti­ cally beautiful with its flickering candles. Sometimes she and her friend Daisy Green talked of becoming nuns like Mother Elizabeth Lilly, head of the Conservatory of Music.10

I8

The Reluctant Apostate

Years later, basking in the glow of James's fame, she would slip away from their Manhattan hotel to attend morning Mass. And, it is said, she repaired to a convent in 19 14 where, nearly desperate, she conquered her morphine addic­ tion. Training and Education

James and Ella O'Neill had no doubt about the kind of education their sons would receive . The lads would be sent to Catholic schools: Jamie to Notre Dame (minim division), Georgetown Preparatory, and then to Fordham; Eugene to St. Aloysius, the minim at Mount St. Vincent in Riverdale (the Bronx) and later to De La Salle in Manhattan. Given James's loyalty to Ireland11 and both parents' devotion to Catholicism, neither Jamie nor Eugene could have re­ mained unaffected by these powerful cultural influences. The Gelbs note that Eugene read the novels of "the Irish romantic, Charles Lever, and the volumes of Irish history with which James's library was studded . . . . "12 The play­ wright-to-be had been born into a milieu, a climate of opinion, a rich religious and cultural tradition that would leave lasting marks on his identity. Like so many of his characters (Smitty in the Glencairn plays, Dion An­ thony in The Great God Brown, and Edmund Tyrone), O'Neill always saw himself as something of an alien in an unfriendly zone, a "stranger. " His feel­ ings of estrangement began to develop very early, no doubt, when father and mother were touring with Monte Cristo. Of course, they sometimes took him along with them before he went to school and while Jamie was at Notre Dame. The earliest terror came when he was sent off to the Sisters of Charity, at age seven, to St. Aloysius (Mount St. Vincent). This was in the fall of 189 5. Because he was quiet and introspective, not many teachers and classmates suspected the intense pain Eugene felt in his "abandonment. " In this early pe­ riod religion, with its promised rewards for developing a pious interior life, appealed to his already contemplative nature. Religion asked and promised love. Still, he felt betrayed. Slowly he began to lose confidence in the promise: " . . . Eugene burrowed into himself. In the depths of his being, below all con­ scious thought and decision, he began to armor himself against love. "13 The teachings of the catechism had seemed beautiful, but hopes alone could not satisfy his need for the closeness and warmth of his beloved mother and hero brother. ( Jamie had himself felt abandoned a decade earlier when his mother left him in the Indiana winter.) Years later Eugene would recall to Carlotta Monterey his terrifying memories of being abandoned . . . . he talked of his pain each fall, when, after a summer of secure love, the whole terrible betrayal was repeated, and again he was sent away in spite of

The Lad, the Rebel, the Artist

r9

all the tears.Whatever he suffered from the other frustrations of childhood, this was the experience of which he always talked with the greatest bitter­ ness-never forgetting the shock to his love for his parents and his trust in them when they banished him to school.14

If life for the lads at Mount St . Vincent was rather spartan, this posed no great problem for young O'Neill. He would always be able to adapt to physical hardship. Like the others, he was called upon to serve early Mass in the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception. One supposes that, in his own way, he took solace from these rigors. On her occasional visits to the school, Ella hinted that he should give some thought to a vocation as priest. Not all his classmates, however, saw O'Neill as especially pious: "He didn't seem particularly reli­ gious to me," Joseph A. McCarthy recalled. "He went to church every Sunday because we all had to go. "15 His polite manner stood as a model of decorum, even if he was looked upon as something of a loner. In his five years at Riverdale he would encounter the typical Catholic mode of religious instruction that obtained in the United States from the years after the Civil War until the fourth or fifth decade of the twentieth century. Nowhere else in the world were so many Catholic children drilled in the catechism as thoroughly as in American parochial schools; nowhere did the notion of Catholicism as embodying a tidy system of rules and regula­ tions covering practically every aspect of life gain stronger hold on the faith­ ful. ...But by no means was the defensive posture wholly beneficial. For example, theology was taught as a series of ineluctable syllogisms rather than a delve into mystery, and the "siege mentality" the schools inculcated was often carried over to life outside the classroom.16

Even so, the grown man would have recollections of spiritual joy experienced in these childhood days. First Communion day may have been the happiest . On May 24 [1900], Ascension Thursday, after confession, penance, and mor­ tification to prepare himself for a state of grace, he received for the first time the sacrament of Holy Communion. It all was familiar to him through his regular attendance at Mass, his countless times as an altar boy: the Offertory preparations, the solemn Canon with the elevation of the Sacred Host and the chalice, the ringing of the bell, the "Memento" for the dead and "Nobis quoque peccatoribus" for the living, all climaxed in the Communion. But for all his familiarity with the ancient prayers and rituals, they took on a new solemnity and mystical significance this day as he first partook of the Eucharist, the sanctified bread and wine that had been transmuted into the Body and the Blood of the Redeemer. He was now one with Christ.17

The memory of such an experience was certain to be carried throughout the long journey. Never would the cords that tethered him to this Catholic world be entirely severed.

20

The Reluctant Apostate

At Mount St. Vincent his teachers were nuns. Their punishments were something to recall in more or less good humor, as he did when he wrote to former classmate McCarthy: "Do you ever think of Sister Martha who used to knuckle us on the bean ? And Sister Gonzaga ? They often come back to me." 18 When he enrolled at De La Salle in the fall of 1900, however, he was intro­ duced to the " manly" style of the Christian Brothers. This school, in the heart of Midtown on 5 9th near 6th Avenue, celebrated the man in motion. But the horseplay and aggressive athleticism did not appeal to Eugene. In this portrait we may be reminded of Joyce's Stephen Dedalus, who was offended and fright­ ened by the boys' rough play at Clongowes. In his first year at De La Salle, however, O'Neill lived " at home, " that is, in an apartment near Central Park. In addition, Ella herself seemed to be making an effort to spend time with him. In his second year there he was placed in the boarding department, for his mother had fallen back into the snare of her morphine addiction. Nevertheless, he did well enough on the academic side, although his record never equalled Jamie's at Notre Dame and Fordham. Nor did he make any sort of outward show, again unlike his brother, who had excelled in dramatics and elocution. Indeed Jamie was only too visible. It was in his senior year at Fordham (De­ cember 1899 ) that he was " asked to leave " the Rose Hill campus for " indis­ cretions." Eugene's faith was diminishing; he was losing heart, although he did not know just why. It seems now that his view of life as tragic may have had its roots in his mother's sickness and consequent aloofness. Eugene could not hold her; she drifted from his grasp. Depressed and sullen, he found it harder and harder to keep faith. He asked his father to withdraw him from De La Salle. James had had enough of moving a son from one school to another, but he reluctantly granted Eugene's wish, and the boy entered Betts Academy in Stam­ ford, Connecticut, in the fall of 1902. When, in the summer of the following year he witnessed a demonstration undeniable that his mother was "a dope fiend, " the boy gave up all pretense of fidelity to religion. After learning that her addiction began as a consequence of his birth (morphine administered to ease Ella's pain), he would forever be haunted by this guilt. For the moment, however, he argued violently with his father about " practicing" his religion. The rebellion had begun. Soon he would move hellbent toward undoing him­ self. Jamie's course to self-destruction was more "classic" : booze, wenching, and a failure to take responsibility for his acts. Yet he seemed on the surface such a merry fellow in a sort of extended adolescence. Even when people saw the danger of his behavior, they enjoyed his company, but his life over the next two decades may be described as slow self-immolation. Eugene turned inward, a young man nearly blinded with bitter fury in his discovery of how "rotten "

The Lad, the Rebel, the A rtist

2I

life was . His capacity for self-annihilation was more ominous than his older brother's, however. Indeed, in his loss of hope there is, perhaps, something of a mystery. How great is the fall of the idealist turned angry, the poet who finds himself for a season in hell ! Eugene O'Neill, whose boyish vision had been edifying and beautiful, was beginning a long journey toward melancholy. In manhood, no matter how often he struggled to rek indle faith, the sparks would be each time extinguished . As one of his characters says, "Be god, there's no hope. " O'Neill became a restless spirit, an indiv idual who is both intimidating and vulnerable. He frightens family and friends because his disaffection is not pretended . He can damn God and religion with a power unknown to those who play at alienation. In a few years O'Neill would meet a woman who was herself something of a rebel. Her name was Dorothy Day. She too stopped at the "Hell Hole, " as if it were one of the stations along the via dolorosa. Like his, her life would be remembered more for works than days . At the moment of their meeting, however, each had come to a standstill. They would love each other in spirit and memory. As we shall see further along, she carefully re­ corded her anguish for his sorrow. He never identified with the lads at Betts or the men of Princeton. Eugene took no part in team sports but liked better the solitary exercise of swimming. Some days he would swim so far out into the literal deep as to place his life in danger. He took greater and greater risks-risks with alcohol, absinthe, and "chorus girls . " He flaunted mere rules. Eugene began to read the mordant po­ ets: Dowson, Swinburne, Wilde, Rossetti, Baudelaire, and Poe ( "whoremon­ gers and degenerates, " old Tyrone calls them). His heroes were the white-hot intellectuals: Ibsen, Shaw, Nietzsche, Rousseau ( "atheists, fools, and mad­ men "). He read Emma Goldman's Mother Earth, while he was forging his first links to anarchism and socialism . For a time these ideas held him, but he would come to believe that no mere political or socialist scheme could undo the tragedy that life is . . . . any victory we may win is never the one we dreamed of winning. The point is that life in itself is nothing. It is the dream that keeps us fighting, willing- living! Achievement, in the narrow sense of possession, is a stale finale. The dreams that can be be completely realized are not worth dream­ ing . 1 9

The year at Princeton ( 1906- 1907) only accelerated the dizzy spiral . Em­ barrassed by the rah-rah pastimes of most undergraduates, Eugene glared at his "fellow" freshmen as fools hopelessly ignorant of life's dreary reality. What Louis Sheaffer said of him may remind us again of James Joyce, six years O'Neill's senior: "Eugene yearned to be part of something larger than himself;

22

The Reluctant Apostate

he both felt superior to and envied those who belonged, he wanted friends and did not want them, he wanted most of all the strength to stand alone. "20 In the spring he attended classes with less and less regularity and by the end of the term he had nearly quit. Recognizing his plight, he made no objection when his name was quietly dropped from the class (of 19 10) roster. Establishing a lifetime pattern, he could not or would not fit in. Few artists have confronted with more acute insight than O'Neill the problem of "not be­ longing. " But his alienation was not altogether personal and, therefore, was not merely self-indulgent. He came to see estrangement as the very condition of modern man. It is quite true that others had seen it before him: Baudelaire for orie, T. S. Eliot for another. If the later existentialists and absurdists have promulgated a colder variety of pessimism, their basic premises seem hardly to have differed from O'Neill's. Of course, his loner personality contributed to O'Neill's estrangement; and the situational matters of his childhood intensified his fear of being aban­ doned. He learned from the Rubaiyat that no one can rewrite what has been set down. We are forced to wonder, even so, what life might have been for both James, Jr., and Eugene O'Neill had the tragedy of their mother's morphine ad­ diction not befallen this talented family. We speak, often without much confi­ dence in our assumptions, of the combination of givens, accidents, and choices that make the personal equation of one's "fate. " But some, like O'Neill, speak of the mystery of individual destiny. No one can know it in advance. Nor can one ever fathom it entirely, even looking back. When he became obstreperous, morose, and opinionated, his fellow stu­ dents and teachers could hardly be blamed for viewing Eugene as conceited and his behavior as outrageous. If O'Neill later came to be regarded as a ge­ nius, nothing suggests that he was looked upon as a prodigy in his school years. Although he was remembered with his "nose in a book, " his teachers and fellow students did not think of him as brilliantly gifted. Later, having already been mortified by Jamie's colossal waste of talent and the scandal of his public carrying on, James and Ella had good reason to fear that Eugene might visit upon them another disappointment. To see the older brother's bale­ f ul influence on the younger no doubt frightened all those who cared for him. O'Neill knew, moreover, as anyone does who treats his own life without re­ spect, what effect his rebellion was having on others. He knew that his parents were frozen with fear by the parallels they could see developing, his life to Jamie's. The one man, after all, was a f ull decade older, his talents already squandered. When he transferred these years to autobiography, the playwright took care to place the blame where it belonged. I'd like to see anyone influence Edmund more than he wants to be. His quiet­ ness fools people into thinking they can do what they like with him. But he's

The Lad, the Rebel, the Artist

23

stubborn as hell inside and what he does is what he wants to do, and to hell with anyone else! ( LD], 3 5 )

This passage established Eugene O 'Neill's own part in wrecking his youth. Even in those years he understood what he was doing and the price he would surely pay. He was heading into an extended period (1909- 1 912) of wandering, working, and adventuring. None of it was established on much of a plan, of course, nor could his activities be defended as constructive. If some of his ex­ periences could be used later as material for his plays, that was his good for­ tune, not the dividend of prudent investment. The best that might be said about the years of adventuring was that he gained a greater love for the sea and earned a certificate as able-bodied seaman. But a great many things turned out badly. He entered into a hopelessly ill-advised marriage which produced a son, Eugene O'Neill, Jr. (He would not see the boy until the latter was twelve years old. ) James managed to get his Eugene lined up with a gold-prospecting team heading for Honduras. He found there not gold but malaria. He j oined his father's acting company for a short time, signed aboard a ship bound for Buenos Aires, knocked about, returned to America, was divorced from his first wife (Kathleen Jenkins O 'Neill) on the grounds of his admitted adultery, and moved into a flophouse on Fulton Street. He remained there for some time in a sort of boozy fog. After another sea voyage (to England) O'Neill returned to New York and apparently hit bottom. Early in 1 912 he attempted suicide by veronal, a drug easily accessible without prescription. That summer he moved in with his family and worked as a reporter for the New London Telegraph. The protracted period of self-destructive behavior ended at Christmas time of that year, when he was admitted into the Gaylord Farm Sanitarium in Con­ necticut. He would remain there until early summer of 1 913 , a tuberculosis patient. In the " san" he read and wrote, inspired in large part by the Irish Players of the Abbey Theatre, who had made their first American tour the pre­ vious winter. Greenwich Village, Radicals, and the Provincetown Theatre

O 'Neill's dissolute days were far from ended. By now, however, he had come to see, not j ust in anger but with a critical eye, the actual problems of his fa­ ther's theater and to fathom somewhat the significance of the new drama. He read now with intellectual attention all the modern playwrights. Moreover, having access carte blanche, via James, to all the Broadway playhouses, he be­ gan to appreciate what gifted and serious writers might accomplish: I bsen, Strindberg, Hauptmann, Wedekind, Yeats, and Synge: "It was seeing the Irish

24

The Reluctant Apostate

Players . . . that gave me a glimpse of my opportunity. . . . I went to see every­ thing they did. "21 He had still to complete his course in the hard knocks curriculum. I n Greenwich Village h e formed lifetime friendships and associations - political, intellectual, and theatrical. Having determined "to be an artist or nothing, " in the Village O'Neill found himself among a group of idealistic writers, actors, and political activists. Both by accident and by design, they took the lead in forming a mature American theater to keep pace with developments in the other arts, philosophy, and psychology. The story of O 'Neill's association with the Provincetown Players has been many times told.22 The story includes the emergence of a new philosophy of American drama. George Cram ( "Jig" ) Cook, who with Susan Glaspell was chief founder of the Provincetown Theatre, would make an act of faith in the amateur. He wished to provide the playwright a place to experiment and there­ by to learn. Paradox was built into his ideal, however: commercial success would constitute failure. Yet even radical ideas can be as much the result of accident as they are of planning: " Quite possibly there would have been no Provincetown Players had there not been Irish Players. What he saw done for Irish life he wanted for American life - no stage conventions in the way of pro­ j ecting with humility of true feeling. "23 Cook saw what O 'Neill saw and was in a position to do something about it. Nevertheless, Eugene O 'Neill stands as the central figure in this story. He ran with Jig Cook's idea of a theater liberated from the shackling sentimental­ ism of his father's day. Yes, he needed the Provincetown but, as history shows, he became its resident genius. Glaspell said as much in describing how the first members felt when they read a play submitted by O 'Neill, who was summering on Cape Cod in I 9 I 6 with his anarchist friend, Terry Carlin. " So Gene took 'Bound East for Cardiff' from his trunk and Freddie Burt read it to us . . . . Then we knew what we were for. "24 Bound East headed the first bill of the fall season in I 9 I 6- I 9 I 7 . Between I 9 I 5 - I 9 22, the seven years when Cook was in charge, the Provincetown introduced fifteen O 'Neill plays.25 His success marked a strange watershed: "The tempting offers that came on the heels of the Provincetown's success had drawn them to other theaters. O'Neill, their outstanding playwright, was also committed to uptown producers. The Prov­ incetown had fulfilled its mission so well that he no longer needed it; his days of apprenticeship were over and his last play, The Hairy Ape, had swept away the final timidities of commercial managers. "26 Cook's ideal had undergone a transformation, the inevitable result of his leaguing with other idealists and revolutionaries. Of course, O 'Neill's part in this history constitutes yet another form of his personal rebellion: not only against the shallow American theater of the day but, by implication, against his father. James O 'Neill had supported Eugene as well as he thought he could. He paid for the publication of his son's

The Lad, the Rebel, the Artist

25

first book of plays in 1 9 1 4 . He took a box with Ella for the opening of Beyond the Horizon at the Morosco Theatre the night of February 3 , 1 9 20. The elder O 'Neill had been both defeated and redeemed by the American theater. For, irony within irony, his greatest vindication was wrought by his rebel son, who had set out to destroy his father's "hateful " theater.

We have gotten slightly ahead of the story. Eugene O 'Neill's rebellion via the Provincetown had to do not only with the drama ( and his father) but with an entire set of values, social and political. In these years ( 1 9 1 6- 1 9 2 3 ) he came to know in Provincetown and Greenwich Village an assortment of radicals, bohemians, anarchists, and free-thinkers. Involved in sometimes harrowing as­ sociations, he began to sift through his values. If his lifestyle and ideological preferences seemed to express contempt for religious values, especially Catholi­ cism, he did not truly elude religion's nets. O 'Neill was haunted by the idea of God (a condition examined in both chapters three and six) . The entries in his log of spiritual anguish, however, suggest that this part in the rebel's forming constituted a period of immense and painful growth and development. In the Village gathered talented practitioners in the arts and politics. Among this group of young socialists and anarchists was a fiery immigrant named Hippolyte Havel. His native brilliance never fully realized, Havel had been fellow-traveler and lover of Emma Goldman,27 whose Mother Earth magazine O'Neill had begun reading in 1 9 0 6 . She preached the evil of all in­ stitutional authority, especially that of religion and all agencies of capitalism. As he came upon these leftists and free thinkers, O'Neill's own beliefs were still forming. That he learned much from them hardly seems contestable. Many of the young radicals wrote for or took part in the dramatic produc­ tions of the Provincetown Players. They performed at the Wharf Theater in Provincetown in summers and in two theaters on Macdougal Street in the Vil­ lage. But, since the majority of the "players " were amateurs, most made their living in other areas, especially journalism. Many have become well known names in American intellectual history: Michael Gold, Floyd Dell, and Max Eastman of the Masses; John ( Jack) Silas Reed and Louise Bryant. Reed, who was dazzled by the Bolshevik Revolution in 1 9 1 7 , traveled to Moscow to cover that explosive moment in Russian history. Out of this came his powerful ac­ count, Ten Days that Shook the World ( 1 9 1 9 ) and Bryant's Six Red Months in Russia ( 1 9 1 8 ) . O 'Neill admired Reed's idealism and was captivated by Louise Bryant's beauty and liberated spirit. Bryant, pledged to Reed, seems to have initiated an affair with O 'Neill in 1 9 1 6 by suggesting that she was denied relations with Jack owing to his kidney ailment. She suggested further that Reed would not be offended by her liaison with Eugene. ( O 'Neill's capacity for guilt could

26

The Reluctant Apostate

hardly have been diminished by this betrayal of his friend. ) Reed returned to Russia in 1 9 1 9 , followed by Louise in 1 9 20 . In August they met in Moscow, where Reed died of typhus. On October 24, 1 9 20, his body was interred in the Kremlin wall. He is the only American ever to be so honored by the Soviet government. The daring young women who contributed to the Provincetown project made life exciting in the Village: Edna St. Vincent Millay, Ida Rauh, Nina Moise, and others. Among them was a j ournalist and short story writer named Agnes Boulton.2 8 Some accounts suggest that she looked like Louise Bryant. Both were beautiful. But this factor no doubt complicated her relations with O'Neill: "This resemblance had rather an obnoxious effect on me. The main thing I wanted to find out was what she looked like. Perhaps I felt it was a good thing. For if each man carries in his heart an image of the woman he can love, then at least I bore some resemblance to that woman! Actually no two women were ever more unlike than Louise Bryant and myself. "29 In the bitterly cold winter of 1 9 1 7- 1 9 1 8 , they had met in a bar called the Golden Swan, and the playwright fell in love with her almost immediately. For some years after their marriage in April of 1 9 1 8 , they seemed happy with one another: in Province­ town, in Greenwich Village, in Bermuda, and elsewhere. Ella and James liked Agnes and became proud grandparents of Shane Rudraighe, who was born in Provincetown in October of 1 9 1 9 . Eugene and Agnes had another child, Oona, who was born in Bermuda in 1 9 2 5 . Many other " steadies" came into and out o f the Golden Swan, o r "the Hell Hole, " as it was more often called. A gang of Irish toughs, the " Hudson Dusters , " seemed to respect O'Neill's "values" and his introspective genius. The Golden Swan, whose memory O 'Neill fused with another place like it ( "Jimmy the Priest's " at 2 5 2 Fulton Street) , was owned by an ex-Tammany Hall politician named Tom Wallace. The list of patrons included Jig Cook and Susan Glaspell, Dorothy Day, journalists Max Eastman and Michael Gold, and Terry Carlin - socialists all. Some of these Hell Hole "regulars " were memori­ alized in The Iceman Cometh, O'Neill referring to them in an interview as "the best friends I've ever known. " 30 His memory of them was clear: "I knew 'em well. I've know 'em all for years . . . . Harry Hope, and all the others - the An­ archists and Wobblies and French Syndicalists, the broken men, the tarts, the bartenders. " 31 Yet O 'Neill could not maintain a white-hot zeal for causes and programs. That he was clearly sympathetic to the idealism of his friends is given some proof in the political views that surface in The Hairy Ape, All God's Chillun Got Wings, and The Iceman. But socialist activism was never O 'Neill's primary theme. As early as 1 9 2 2 he offered the following apologia: " . . . as we progress, we are always seeing further than we can reach. I sup­ pose that is one reason why I have come to feel so indifferent toward political and social movements of all kinds. Time was when I was an active socialist,

The Lad, the Rebel, the Artist

27

and, after that, a philosophical anarchist. But today I can't feel that anything like that really matters. " 32 Many reasons for this detachment suggest themselves. The first is that O 'Neill's temperament did not allow him to function very well as part of a team in the way that Jack Reed, for example, could: that is, he found it dif­ ficult to submerge his individuality in the group identity. The closest he came to joining anything may have been the Provincetown of Cook, Glaspell, et al. His chief professional companions in the twenties were, besides George Jean Nathan, Robert Edmund Jones and Kenneth Macgowan (the latter two de­ signer and producer respectively, his exact contemporaries, with whom he made up the well known " Triumvirate " ) . Over the years his closest friend was probably Saxe Commins, nephew of Emma Goldman, who became O 'Neill's confidant, typist, and editor. If a trace of hauteur occasionally colored his at­ titude, that posture more than likely constituted a defense, j ust as Jamie's wit and repartee parried attempts by others to get too close to him. In each case we see a man who had been made vulnerable and who wished not to be hurt further in relationships. If he shared something of the radicals' idealism, O'Neill was in truth less enthusiastic in his estimate of human nature. Several of his characters manifest similar attitudes: Dion Anthony, Con Melody, and Larry Slade among them. His deeper concerns hinged on questions of an existential nature: Where

is home? How does the individual fit in? How shall we meet the fundamental tragedy that life is? His heart was not in the Movement, as philosophical anar­ chism was called. 33 Perhaps a useful way to approach O 'Neill's complexity is to study what was perhaps the most singular relationship of his spiritual J ourney. Dorothy D ay

She would always march to a different drummer. It was in service to the poor and troubled that she would eventually find her vocation. In time she became a friend of living saints like Jacques Maritain, Thomas Merton, and Peter Maurin.34 With Maurin she founded the Catholic Worker Movement in 19 3 2 and its megaphone, The Catholic Worker, in 19 3 3 · Dorothy Day became some­ thing of a gadfly to the privileged, especially powerful antiliberal and voices in the Catholic Church: for example, "the radio priest, " Fr. Charles Coughlin, and Francis Cardinal Spellman.35 " Hospitality houses, " which the movement established, mark a high moment in the history of American private charities. The Catholic Workers have operated these havens to shelter and fe ed the down­ and-out (today called the homeless) in New York and other large American cities. In later years Dorothy and her volunteer colleagues joined with Martin Luther King, Cesar Chavez, and the Berrigan brothers in support of civil rights

28

The Reluctant Apostate

for the exploited and in protests against the Vietnam War. Dorothy remained a lifelong pacifist. Nine years O'Neill's junior, Dorothy Day was born in Brooklyn on Novem­ ber 8 , 1 8 9 7 . By the time she arrived in the Village, she had made only a modest impact as a student at the University of Illinois ( 1 9 1 4 - 1 9 1 6) . But her socialist proclivities had been incubated there. When she moved back with her family to New York City, she went to work for Socialist and Communist journals: The Call, The Masses, and The Liberator. Dorothy was a worker: she worked for the cause and worked with fidelity. The decade 1 9 20- 1 9 3 0 proved to be very difficult. For a time she had rather brutalizing relationships that included mar­ riage and divorce. Her